The Canadian Justice Review Board publicizes important judicial activities and their impact on Canadian society, and advocates for every person the fundamental right to receive from courts non-political decisions based on established law.

 

BOOKS  in  REVIEW

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The Charter Revolution and the Court Party

The Most Danerous Branch (now in 3rd printing)

Short Pants to Striped Trousers

Courted and Abandoned

Whiplash and Other Useful Illnesses

Outrage- Is justice being served? No!

Dancing with Lawyers

Lawyers Gone Bad: money, sex and madness in Canada's legal profession

Coercing Virtue: The Worldwide Rule of Judges

Supreme at Last: The Evolution of the Supreme Court of Canada

Supreme Court for Dummies

Against Judicial Activism: The Decline of Freedom & Democracy in Canada

La justice? Quelle justice? le livre de l'honorable juge Marc Brière

Violence Risk Assessment and Management: Essential Writings

Friends of the Court:The Privileging of Interest Group Litigants

The Future of Freedom:Illiberal Democracies

The Heiress v The Establishment-Where Angels Fear To Tread the book's critical stance on the legal profession and the judiciary was sufficiently controversial that Osgoode Hall's library copy was "kept under lock and key in the Librarian's Desk." (xiii) It circulated in the legal profession as "an underground copy" that the legal establishment "couldn't do anything about" and seemingly "wanted to suppress."

This Is Not The RCMP I Joined exposing and bringing to justice those within the organization who threatened to destroy the culture and values of the RCMP, and steal from the members themselves.

The Interpretation Game-How Judges and Lawyers make law

No One Would Listen: a book that may make you lose all hope that any gov't agency is capable of anything other than staggering incompetence and outright stupidity.

Swindlers cons, cheats & white collar crooks...and how to protect yourself

Snakes in Suits

The Doctrine of Res Judicata in Canada, 3rd ed. by Donald J. Lange, B.A., LL.B., Ph.D- The doctrine of res judicata is a fundamental litigation doctrine of the court system which enforces the rule of law that a person can only sue once for each case